Summer - Mt Tabor
Transcription
Summer - Mt Tabor
Neighborhood Association Newsletter Serving the only neighborhood on the slopes of an extinct volcano Volume 9, Issue 4 Summer 2007 Mt. Tabor neighborhood entryway completed By John Laursen or more than a decade, members of the Mt. Tabor neighborhood association have been working with the Portland Office of Transportation to create a new Mt. Tabor neighborhood entryway at SE 50th & Hawthorne Boulevard as an enhancement to the Hawthorne Transportation Plan. The entryway sign, a low wall faced with the same black-diamond basalt that was used in the remodeling of the crater amphitheater in Mt. Tabor Park, features a large plaque of cast bronze with the words “Mount Tabor Neighborhood” to signal eastbound drivers on Hawthorne that they are leaving the commercial district and entering a residential area. On the pedestrian side of the wall, two smaller bronze plaques relay the histories of Mt. Tabor and of Hawthorne Boulevard. This has been a completely grassroots effort, conceived and designed by MTNA members who have donated their time. Although the curb extension where it sits is part of the Hawthorne Transportation Plan, the entryway itself has been created without government support, funded by the MTNA and by a generous grant from Jan Caplener of Realty Trust and numerous contributions from Mt. Tabor residents. The neighborhood association has committed to installing and then maintaining the landscape on the entryway curb extension, and is continuing to raise money for this purpose. To support our fundraising John Laursen and Dave Hilts unveil the Mt. Tabor entryway on August 18. effort, we’re raffling off a framed giclée print donated by Mt. Tabor artist Molly Cliff Hilts. Summer is a Fish Story is a lovely and colorful landscape inspired by a walk along the large reservoir at Mt. Tabor Park on a very early July morning. It measures 31 ¼" x 27 ½" (framed size) and has a value of $400. Raffle tickets are $3 each or two for $5. The print is on view at Bread and Ink, and you are encouraged to stop in to see it and buy a ticket or two. Tickets are available there and at the Sapphire Hotel through September 18. The raffle will take place at the MTNA meeting on September 19; you need not be present to win. Tax-deductible donations for the landscaping effort can still be made to Southeast Uplift, 3534 SE Main, Portland 97214; write “Mt. Tabor entryway” in the memo line on your check. We welcome volunteers to help with the landscaping and maintenance effort. If you are interested in participating in this community project, please drop an email to john.laursen@mttaborpdx.org . What’s inside Warner Pacific welcomes . . . . . . . . . . . 2 A Taste of Atkinson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Mediation ends . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Renovation of the Tabor Commons . . . 4 Franklin High School . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Glencoe Elementary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Mt. Tabor neighborhood team . . . . . . . . 6 Concerts love their volunteers . . . . . . . . 8 55th & Belmont Green Street update . 8 Volcano gardening . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Mt. Tabor Neighborhood Association newsletter The Mt. Tabor Neighborhood Association newsletter is published quarterly (February, May, August, November). The deadline for submission of articles is the tenth of the month before publication. The Mt. Tabor Neighborhood Association (MTNA) reserves all rights, and all copy submitted will be edited for clarity and length. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission is prohibited. If you are interested in advertising or have an idea for an article, email gayle.marechal@mttaborpdx.org. www.mttaborpdx.org Warner Pacific welcomes neighbors By Katy Steding Warner Pacific’s second annual end of summer festival, Warnerpalooza, will be held on Saturday, September 8, from 2 to 6 p.m. Admission is free, but please bring a bag of unused school supplies for My Father’s House, metro Portland’s only family shelter. This year’s event includes three hours of live music including renowned Portland jazz and blues group Soul City, Christian contemporary artists Dan and Georgene Rice, and Warner Pacific’s own United Image student group. The popular kid’s carnival has been expanded from last year—bounce around the Castle with your little ones, try the rockem-sockem gladiator joust, and don’t miss the velcro wall. A street fair has been added this year with food, crafts, and information booths. We would love participation from neighbors and there is no charge for a booth, but space will be limited. Please call Katy Steding at 503-517-1369 for a vendor application or visit www.warnerpacific.edu/warnerpalooza. Look for a fall events calendar in your mailbox with full listings for Warner Pacific College, including concerts, lectures, and athletic contests. A Taste of Atkinson, October 6 E d i tor Nadine Fiedler By Tracy Wiens Sto r y E ditor Gayle Marechal On Saturday, October 6, Atkinson Elementary School will host A Taste of Atkinson. This free, day-long event will feature community chefs, musicians, and artists representative of Atkinson’s diverse student origins—Latino, Chinese, Vietnamese, and the Pacific NW. Please join us from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. for a delightful day of music, tasty tidbits, arts and crafts, and tours of the Atkinson gardens. The Taste of Atkinson is made possible by a grant from Southeast Uplift. For more information or if you would like to help in any way, please call Jennifer Pultz at 971-409-0233. D e s i gn an d Produc tio n Lili Henzler D i st r i butio n Bob Eckland A d v e rt isin g Paul Leistner ������� ���� ��� ��������� ���������� ��� �� ��� ������ ���������� ������ ������������ � ������ �� ������� ������ ����� � ������� ������� � � � ������� ���� �� ���� �������� ����� �� � ������� ������� � �������� ���� ����� � ���������� � ������ ������������� � ��������� �������������� ���� �� �������� � ��������� �� ��������������������� �������� ������ ������������ � � � � � ������ �� ������� ���� ����� ����� ���������� ����� ����� ���������� � ������ ������ ��� ��� �������������� ����������� �������� � ����������� ���� ���� �� �������� � ��������� �� ��������������������� 2 Mediation ends; public process starts By Bruce Treat The mediation between the Mt. Tabor and South Tabor neighborhood associations, and Portland Parks and Recreation (PP&R), has ended—and the results are positive. Representatives from both neighborhood associations, PP&R, and two co-mediators as well as other concerned citizens have begun talks on crafting a public process to create a parks property disposition policy and update the Mt. Tabor master plan. As you may recall, mediation was needed when, in the fall of 2006, MTNA found out that PP&R was negotiating the sale of 8.5 acres of land at the Mt. Tabor central yard and nursery to Warner Pacific College. These negotiations involving a memorandum of understanding had been done under the radar of and without input from the public or the Mt, Tabor and South Tabor associations. Residents from MTNA began requesting documentation from the city, and both neighborhood associations passed resolutions opposing the sale, lease, or transfer into private hands of any land at Mt. Tabor Park. PP&R eventually pulled the sale off the table and made overtures to meet with both neighborhood associations to clear the air. Eventually, the city ombudsman got involved and suggested that the parties seek a mediator to resolve the dispute. All the parties agreed to the mediation. PP&R also agreed that no sale or lease of any park land or any negotiations regarding them would happen during the mediation. Ten members of MTNA, led by John Laursen, and four members of STNA, led by Scott Yelton, volunteered their time and energy to meet four times during April and May with two parks representatives, director Zari Santner and community relations manager Gay Greger, and the two co-mediators, Jamie Damon and Mary Forst. The mediation sessions were at times tense but always cordial, and communications improved as the process went on with the help of the co-mediators. On May 14, the parties signed an agreement that a formal PP&R policy related to property disposition is needed and that the development of such a process and guidelines for it is expected to be completed June 30, 2008. “We take the responsibility of safeguarding Mt. Tabor Park seriously, and learning of the possible sale of a piece of the park was really disturbing to us,” said John Laursen. “It took a leap of faith on the part of both the parks director and the community members who participated, and then a considerable investment of time and energy, but that effort paid off with an outcome that we could not only accept but embrace.” Scott Yelton added, “We all enjoy this great park system only because of the efforts of earlier generations who worked hard to create it, and it is our responsibility—indeed, our obligation— to honor their foresight and generosity by being good stewards of our parks, and to pass them along intact to those who will follow us.” The parties working with other groups and the mediators will form a task force to design a public involvement process to update the Mt. Tabor Park master plan. The current master plan (http://www.mttaborpdx.org/history. html) was finished in 2000 but never adopted by city council. The task force will also consider pros and cons of maintaining, refurbishing, enhancing, or relocating the central yard and nursery while also conducting financial analyses in response to the needs identified during the public process. The goal of the master plan update task force is to ensure an open, transparent, community-wide and inclusive process, where all ideas are welcomed and considered while following consistent values as articulated in the current master plan. One of the concerns expressed in the mediation was that PP&R didn’t communicate effectively with the community, and the task force wants to address that. The task force will then jointly take the updated master plan to City Council for approval by June 30, 2008. MTNA board members familiar with the proceedings cautioned that although PP&R abandoned its pursuit of sale, lease, or transfer of the Mt. Tabor central yard and nursery, that issue is yet to be finalized by a City Council vote. L aurelhurst Dentistry Clarice Johnston d.m.d. & Associates • Treatment explained and discussed • Teeth whitening • New patients welcome 503/233-3622 2520 East Burnside 3 Support the renovation of the Tabor Commons By Paul Leistner Community members need your help to raise $10,000 to renovate the community-owned Tabor Commons building at 57th & Division. The renovations will allow community groups to use the building for meetings and events and Café au Play to start up its family-and-community-friendly coffee house operation. MTNA has made a rare exception to its policy of not allowing newsletter inserts and has included a contribution envelope in this issue. Please send in your contribution today! September renovation: Tabor Commons will work with Café au Play and the Oregon Tradeswomen, Inc. to complete basic renovations. Among other locals donating their services are electrician Traci Sullivan, contractor Leif Nelson (Meteor Building Co.), and plumber Cricket Crockett (Cricket’s Plumbing). We welcome contributions of good-quality building materials and services. Environmental cleanup: Mandatory removal of underground fuel tanks is scheduled for August. The estimated $200,000 project will be funded by contributions from the Oregon Economic and Community Development Department, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and the city of Portland Bureau of Environmental Services. Project background: The Tabor Commons property was transferred to community ownership last summer by the U.S. Marshals, who seized the property in a drug case. Southeast Uplift currently holds the property on behalf of the Mt. Tabor and South Tabor neighborhood associations and the Atkinson Elementary School PTA, guided by a steering committee of community members. In service to others. Putting people in touch with their dreams. Building relationships. Meet Mt. Tabor’s most dynamic real estate team Jan Caplener | Cristen Lincoln Kevin Caplener | Casey Cobb Ginny Kauffman 5015 SE Hawthorne Blvd. 503-232-4763 www.realtytrust.com / hawthornepartners 4 Community design workshops have identified three goals for the site: create a community gathering place (such as a neighborhood coffee shop), create additional space for school and neighborhood activities and projects, and develop innovative environmental features on the site. Long-term plans: Opsis Architecture and Greenworks have worked with community members to create concepts for two future redevelopment phases for the site. Phase I will include further renovation of the existing building and site improvements that will include a public terrace, and many innovative landscape features. Phase II will include the construction of an additional community activity building on the eastern portion of the site. This facility will be available for classes, events, conferences, receptions, and more. Other news: Special thanks to Mariko Locke, State Farm Insurance agent at 51st & Hawthorne, who saved us thousands of dollars by finding us cheaper insurance coverage. The Farm Stand is selling local fruits and berries again this summer; thanks to Pat Rice and Karen Rutledge for cleaning up the site and the landscaping. Portland State University has offered to loan an attractive information kiosk structure with a healthy and vibrant eco-roof. To contribute, make your check out to SEUL—Tabor Commons and send it to Southeast Uplift, 3534 SE Main, Portland OR 97214. All contributions are tax deductible. For more information, call or email Paul Leistner, 503-232-3888 or paulamy@teleport.com), or Kristin Heying, 503-231-2707, kheying@gmail.com. SE 50th & Hawthorne Blvd. 503-232-5299 www.art-heads.com Upgrades at Franklin High School By Lauren Ettlin While students are on vacation, Steve Matthews is at school every day, making sure tasks get done. Steve is Franklin High School’s business manager, a title that broadly encompasses overseeing building maintenance and upgrades, grounds upkeep, physical plant maintenance, finance, information technology, security, and lots of “Steve, can you get this done for me?” Steve approaches each task with a positive attitude, using staff and volunteer resources. He’s working through the maintenance backlog caused by years of budget constraints. This summer his “to do list” has been long: • New textbooks were brought in for math, language arts, and social studies and old textbooks removed. • New, fast computers replaced all of the old computers in the library. Every lab was re-configured, and the workstations re-imaged. Every computer workstation now works and meets or exceeds minimum Portland School District standards. • The weight and fitness and agility rooms were moved to the fitness wing of the building. The dance room was reshaped to accommodate a new dance class. • A room was set up for the new drama teacher. Yes, Franklin will have drama again! • Steve worked with Imago Dei Church volunteers to pressure wash, prime, and paint the school’s exterior doors. He hopes this will be completed in September. • Several rooms are being set up for 100 or so eighth graders from now-closed Kellogg Middle School, who are welcomed at Franklin. • Steve is working through the request lists of eighty or so teachers. • A nd he is working with the volunteer PTA board to get the readerboard sign renovated and functional. Steve Matthews can be reached at 503-916-5140. General information about Franklin is available from the office or counseling staff at the same phone number. How the community can care for Glencoe Elementary By Betsy Salter Here’s a chance to help Glencoe Elementary, at SE 51st between Belmont and Stark, which serves about 500 students from kindergarten through 5th grade. From August 15 through October 31, you can help Glencoe by shopping and dining at Lloyd Center. For every dollar you spend, Glencoe will earn one point. If Glencoe is among the 10 schools with the most points, we will win a cash prize! Last year Glencoe came in second place and earned $3,000. The Lloyd Center Earnings 2 column x 6 inches for Learning program is a great excuse to stock up on everything you need (and want) at Lloyd Center. For more information, please call Kristy Carlson at 503-254-2728 or Kirsten Rian at 503-281-9392, or visit Lloyd Center’s customer service center or website, http://www.lloydcentermall.com/go/mallEvents.cfm. Throughout the school year you can also support Glencoe by purchasing scrip gift cards for stores and Why settleyou for frequent low-interest Money Market Fund from restaurants on Mondays and Fridays rates when you have the 8–8:30 a.m. and 2–2:30 p.m. (Email seapeace2@msn. potential to earn more comwith for more info.) You may also drop off intact * a money market Campbells labels fund? It’sSoup a great wayand to General Mills boxtops that youmake save more for Glencoe Elementary (for more info call Sonja of your money. Erlandson at 503-231-1812). The underlying investment for the accounts is a money market fund. On behalfconsider of Glencoe Elementary’s kiddos, thankandyou You should the investment objective, risks and charges expenses carefully before investing. The prospectus contains this and so much. TURN YOUR SAVINGS INTO EARNINGS. 0.00% other information. Your Edward Jones financial advisor can provide a prospectus, or visit our Web site at www.edwardjones.com, which should be read carefully before investing. Upcoming meetings *Current historical 7-day taxable money market yield available on 00/00/00. Effective yield assumes reinvested income. The rate on the money market fund will fluctuate. An investment Mt. Tabor Neighborhood Association (MTNA) in the Fund is not insured or guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or any other government agency. Although the Fund seeks to preserve the value of your investment at $1.00 per share, itThird is possibleWednesdays, to lose money by investing Fund. p.m. You should consider the 7–in the 8:30 investment objective, risks, and charges and expenses carefully before investing. September 19 October 17 www.edwardjones.com November 21 Call or visit your local financial advisor today. City/Town Name, Phone City/Town Name, Phone Mt. Tabor Presbyterian Church City/Town SE 55th & Belmont Name, Phone Member SIPC 2 column x 2 inches TURN YOUR SAVINGS INTO EARNINGS. Call today for an attractive rate on our money market fund. Name L Neuman Michael Financial Advisor www.edwardjones.com Member SIPC Street Address 5522 E Burnside St City, State,OR ZIP97215 Portland, Phone 503-297-6087 Typefaces are as follows Large Ad Headline: ITC Franklin Gothic Demi Condensed City/Town: ITC Franklin Gothic Demi Body copy: BodoniBerthBQ Regular Condensed 5 Meet the Mt. Tabor neighborhood team By John McLaren When Justin Leonard stepped down as MTNA president at the May meeting, with no clear successor, the neighborhood association set up a new alternative structure, consisting of four board members who now share presidential responsibilities. The new co-presidents are Bruce Treat, Don Jacobson, Bing Wong, and John Laursen. Bruce Treat Treat, MTNA’s new communications coordinator, wears a second hat as secretary, preparing the minutes for the monthly meetings. Before joining the board, he was among the association’s more active members. Besides regular attendance at the meetings, he has volunteered at the annual MTNA clean-ups, helped mediate a dispute between a citizen and the MTNA board, and taken part in the mediation process between the neighborhood association and Portland Parks and Recreation over the future of the city maintenance yard and nursery in Mt. Tabor Park. Treat has several ideas for improving and strengthening MTNA. First he would like to see more people come to the meetings, by seeking out new residents and encouraging former attendees, including former board members, to come back. He also suggests broadening the scope of the association’s website to include something about MTNA’s history, such as when the association was founded and who the officers have been over the years. “This info A passion for plants. A nursery for plant people. 9-7 Daily 9 to 6 daily starting end of Sept. 5050 SE Stark Portland, OR 97215 TEL (503) 231-5050 FAX (503) 231-7123 • 9000 SE Division Portland, OR 97266 TEL (503) 788-9000 FAX (503) 788-9002 w w w. p o r t l a n d n u r s e r y. c o m 6 could easily be put in the website, and I’ll bet profiles of some of those people would be an interesting read in the newsletter,” he says. Treat, who is “40-something,” is employed as an environmental and intellectual property paralegal. He has lived in the Mt. Tabor area for more than two years. You can reach him at president@mttaborpdx.org. Don Jacobson Jacobson, the new MTNA agenda manager, has had an interesting and varied career as an electrical engineer, a professional glassblower whose work has been shown in galleries across the United States, and an acclaimed nature photographer. Jacobson, 63, has been a Mount Tabor resident for more than three years. His deep appreciation and concern for woodlands developed when he was living in the Sierra Nevada foothills. He became active in trying to protect them, founding the small but activist Forest Issues Group and serving for a time as executive director. He now chairs the MTNA environment committee. He has also been involved in community radio, hosting a folk music program on KVMR in Nevada City, California, for 19 years, while serving on their board of directors and programming committee. He currently is a volunteer broadcaster on KBOO-FM with his program, “The Long and Dusty Road.” Jacobson also serves as conservation coordinator for the Portland chapter of the Native Plant Society of Oregon and as volunteer with Portland Audubon. He maintains a website, www.donjacobsonphoto.com, to showcase his photography. Jacobson feels preserving the integrity of Mt. Tabor Park is an “essential task” for the neighborhood and the city, and he would also like to see the MTNA “help make our neighborhood have more of a community character.” Bing Wong As MTNA’s meeting facilitator, Wong runs the meetings with an ambitious goal: finish on time while allowing for ample discussion of the issues on a busy agenda. A 15-year resident of the Mt. Tabor neighborhood, Wong was attracted to the area by its natural setting. As a birder, he values the fact that Mt. Tabor is an important stopover point for migratory birds. Portland has many parks, he notes, but only a few, like Mt. Tabor, have natural areas that can flourish if not disturbed. Wong has been MTNA’s treasurer for more than eight years, an office he continues to hold in addition to his new responsibilities. “MTNA is one of the city’s most active neighborhood associations,” he says. “It’s been a powerful voice for neighbors’ issues. We need to welcome and empower neighbors to keep the association vibrant into the future. The more people with diverse backgrounds and abilities, the more effective we will be.” Longtime board members can help, he says, by sharing their experience with new members, and Southeast Uplift can provide valuable training and support. Wong, 55, is employed by Kaiser Permanente as a medical technologist and clinical laboratory scientist. John Laursen Laursen was a logical choice to fill the post of city mediation liaison on the MTNA board. As chair of the committee mediating with the parks bureau in the dispute over selling off a piece of Mt. Tabor Park, Laursen is already extensively involved in negotiations with the city over that particularly touchy issue. He also served on and then chaired the citizens advisory committee for the Hawthorne Transportation Plan. Through that connection he ended up designing the Mt. Tabor neighborhood entryway at 50th & Hawthorne and was responsible for shepherding it over bureaucratic hurdles in the city government. He believes the neighborhood celebration that occurred at the unveiling of the entryway could serve as a model for future events that would “connect the MTNA with neighbors who don’t necessarily come to our meetings.” “For me the MTNA is all about building community,” he says. He has been pleased to see how “the neighborhood association has grown and flourished in the last decade or so, and become well organized enough and strong enough to do a creditable job of looking out for the public interest in our community.” Laursen, 61, has lived in Mt. Tabor since the spring of 1982, and has been on the MTNA board for about eight years. He is a self-employed book designer and typographer. I’m your Mt Tabor neighbor with nine years in home lending. I specialize in: » Cash-out / debt consolidation refinancing » Non-income verifying financing for self-employed clients » Low to no down payment financing for investors » FHA and VA financing » Financing for credit challenged clients Every loan that funds through August, Mortgage Loans NW will donate $100 to the Portland Public School of your choice. I look forward to helping your family find the perfect fit for a home loan. Proud member of the Hawthorne Blvd Business Association, and sponsor of Mt Tabor Little League. -/24'!'% ,/!.3 ./24(7%34 Darren T. Balogh | Branch Manager Mortgage Loans Northwest | 5015 SE Hawthorne Blvd. Ste A | Portland, OR 97215 503-233-6569 | cell: 503-504-2979 | darren@mortgageloansnw.com #ML-776 7 Mt. Tabor concerts love their volunteers By Mary McWilliams Did you know that the Mt. Tabor Park concerts, which took place on Tuesday nights this July, were organized by a volunteer committee of folks who live in the Mt. Tabor and other close neighborhoods? The committee met almost monthly beginning in January to talk to potential sponsors and vendors to raise the $10,000 budget, pick bands, work out volunteer staffing details, and coordinate the hands-on art activities for children and the community organizations that apply to share information. Perhaps you will recognize one of your neighbors in the core Mt. Tabor committee: Dionne Au-Yeung, Sue Jacoby, Mary McWilliams, Dean Philipp, Maren Peterson, Kathy Schuman, Dorene Smith, and Roger Warren. Joining the committee on concert days were Dave Raphael and Dave Houghton, who placed sandwich boards on major streets around the park, and members of the Friends of Mt. Tabor foot patrol, who directed traffic and reminded people that dogs are not allowed in the caldera. Helping to emcee the event, collect donations, and pick up trash afterwards were Tully Alford and daughter Madeline, Chauncey Anderson and daughter Mara, Stephanie Fleming, Gretta Grimala, Rob Hauss, Diane Newton-Prior, and Monica Smith, along with former committee members. In addition, Portland Parks & Recreation provided staffing for maintenance assistance on concert nights. As you can see, it takes a lot of volunteers to bring the concerts to Mt. Tabor Park. We hope you will consider joining us next year as a volunteer or as a sponsor. We are indebted and grateful to our 2007 sponsors, whom you should support: Academy Theater, Anisha—A Center for Holistic Health, Art Heads Frame Shop, Belmont Dairy, Buds Expert Tree Care, Cooper’s Coffee, Friends of Mt. Tabor foot patrol, Hawthorne Auto Clinic, Hot Dog Ernie, Montavilla neighborhood association, Mountain Ice, Mt. Tabor neighborhood association, Parkside Deli and Fine Foods, Papa Murphy Pizza, Providence Portland Medical Center, Realty Trust, SE Examiner, and US Bank. 55th & Belmont Green Street update By Rhetta Drennan The city of Portland will move water lines in the area of 55th & Belmont to make way for a traffic calming and stormwater facility. Crews will start moving water lines near the end of July, and begin construction in August. The project will extend the curb and add a “Green Street” facility on the northeast corner of the intersection. Stormwater runoff will flow from the street into the landscaped curb extension, where vegetation and soil will filter pollutants and water will soak into the ground. Green Streets keep stormwater out of the sewer system and provide a community green space and visual amenity. The curb extension, along with a refuge island and marked crosswalk, will also increase pedestrian safety. The city will do the work in phases, with periods of inactivity between phases. Residents will have access to their property during work hours, and workers should not need access to your property, working only in the planting strips and street. On-street parking in the work area or in some nearby areas will be prohibited during the work. For information, call or email Rhetta Drennan at 503-823-6006, rhettad@ bes.ci.portland.or.us. City staff members will also attend the August MTNA meeting to explain the project. Can’t make it to the monthly MTNA meetings? Read minutes and more at our web site: www.mttaborpdx.org 8 Gardening on a volcano By Linda Eggiman From a reader’s request for more info: fall is the best time to treat two of the garden’s worst and most destructive pests, slugs and root weevils. Both of these creatures are hatched in the fall, not in the spring as may have been thought. The larvae or grub stage of the root weevil does the most damage, chewing away at the part of the trunk just below the ground. If they manage to girdle it, it will shut off the flow of vital liquids and damage or kill the plant. Orthene has always been super effective if applied as a drench at the base of the trunk in the fall. Nematodes are the best organic method. You can purchase them at your local nursery, but you must be ready to use them immediately, as they are living organisms with a short shelf life. Read the directions and use as a drench. It’s so much easier than trying to track down the crawlers and flying adults in the spring. Slugs also hatch in the fall, and now you see their slimy trails all winter. Whatever slug bait or method you choose, do it in the fall because by spring they have migrated. Apply in the usual places, at the base of the most vulnerable plants where you have seen their damage before. Slugs eat the middle of the leaf, while root weevils notch the edges. Happy hunting. Questions? 503-254-1814, eggie@teleport.com. MTNA bo ard officers Communications coordinator.....Bruce Treat Agenda manager. ................. Don Jacobson Meeting facilitator..................... Bing Wong City mediation liaison and spokesperson.................. John Laursen Vice president..................... Nancy Norby Secretary. ............................ . Bruce Treat Treasurer. ............................ . Bing Wong SEUL liaison........................ Paul Leistner Help deliver newsletters! Please call Bob Eckland at 503-236-4517 or email bob.eckland@mttaborpdx.org to volunteer.
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